Can someone show me a definitive study that suggests that most pedophiles or psychopaths have sexual fetishes?
The types of 'bizarre' fetishes being described don't really seem relevant to me. As long as there has been culture and society, there have been "weird" sexual fetishes. Look at foot binding, for example. That was primarily an attraction/sexual practice and NOT one to restrict women's movements (though it certainly had that effect). And that one's been around for quite awhile. I'm sure in just about every culture you can find something similar--I can think of quite a few in ours.
I guess you could classify pedophilia as a fetish, but I think it is a bit more complex than that for most people.
And I still have trouble with the theory that exposure to what we think of as 'deviant' sexuality will 'create' it in our kids. I don't think that's accurate.
There are many reasons for shielding your children from predatory commercial sexuality, but I don't think fear of turning them into serial rapists and mass murders rates the highest on the list. In fact, it might well lead to complacency in homes where there is strict control of media, and I think that is dangerous.
Also, I still have very strong objections to the implication that any mental illness (especially of the 'worst' predatory kind) is by default the fault of the parents' parenting ability. If parenting alone created psychopaths, then I dare say (from what I have read over the years of being at this site) then MOST of the people on this board should fall into that category. I include myself in that assesment, as I endured quite a bit of chaotic emotional and verbal abuse and witnessed some very frightening things during my childhood (and even on into adulthood). Yet I am not a psychopath, or a pedophile, and I do not abuse my children. I was denied any sort of help or counselling about family issues until I was well into my 20s, so I didn't have any intervention either. Would life have been easier for me if I'd lived in a loving, calm home? I'd like to think so. But I don't know. I guess some people can survive just about anything and turn out to be decent, moral, kind people (I've met several). So it seems logical to me that the reverse could also be true--one can come from a calm, loving home and become a monster. I am pretty sure this has happened once or twice.
I don't think we can be all self-congratulatory that AP parenting is going to be the panacea cure-all for children with mental disorders. I think the only sure way to prevent problems, from a parenting sense, is to be willing to go to that dark place a previous poster mentioned, to be willing to see and respond to a red flag we see in our own children. And I'm sure that even for many parents who ARE willing to do that, sometimes help and resources are very meager and miserly given. And even if, in the end, it turns out that the red-flag behavior was indeed more innocent and preventable than it first appeared--I can't imagine it would make the pain and anguish during the process of discovering that any less! I am positive that there are some perfectly nice, loving AP parents that would in fact bury their heads in the sand in the case of coming to terms that their child might need some intervention in this area. And I'm positive that there are some strict disciplinarian parents that would act immediately to get outside help.
THAT to me seems to be the only real way to 'prevent' harm to others. I agree that a nuturing environment can help along the way more than a cold, distant one. But I think that an observant and proactive parent of any stripe is going to do the better job of containing that kind of behavior earliest.
*edited out details of footbinding, to be blunt that's the only graphic reference to any practice that I've seen in this thread, I guess naming stuff is graphic? Edited out what I could find, at any rate*